Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called on the Muslim world on Friday to support the Palestinian people in their plight against Israel as the United Nations Human Rights Council voted to send a team of international war crimes investigators to probe the deadly shootings of Gaza protesters by Israeli forces.
Speaking during the opening of an extraordinary Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) summit, he said: "There is no difference between the atrocity faced by the Jewish people in Europe 75 years ago and the brutality that our Gaza brothers are subjected to."
He accused Israel of using methods "similar to the Nazis", adding: "I will say openly and clearly that what Israel is doing is banditry, brutality and state terror.”
Speaking before a rally in Istanbul prior to the summit, Erdogan stated that Muslim leaders needed to overcome divisions to combat Israel's "brutality".
The Turkish strongman has been outspoken over the killing by Israeli forces on Monday of some 60 Palestinians on the Gaza border as well as the move of the US embassy to Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem.
"The time has come to stand against Israel's tyranny," Erdogan told a sea of protesters waving Turkish and Palestinian flags.
"I invite all Muslims and all humanity to take action... against those who drag our region and the world into catastrophe with their religious fanaticism," he added.
He told the rally that Muslims had too often given a "shy and cowardly" image to their foes and failed to sort out internal disagreements.
Describing the issue of Jerusalem as a "test", he said: "If we need to speak clearly, the Islamic world failed in the Jerusalem test."
This is the second emergency OIC meeting Erdogan has hosted in the space of half a year after the December 2017 summit, also in Istanbul, that denounced US President Donald Trump's decision to recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel.
A draft summit communique called for "international protection for the Palestinian people" and condemns Israel's "criminal" actions against "unarmed civilians".
The text also accused the US administration of "encouraging the crimes of Israel".
Earlier, the UN Human Rights Council voted through a resolution calling on the council to "urgently dispatch an independent, international commission of inquiry" -- the UN rights council's highest-level of investigation.
Only two of the council's 47 members, the US and Australia, voted against the resolution, while 29 voted in favor and 14 abstained, including Britain, Switzerland and Germany.
The text said the team should investigate all “violations and abuses... in the context of the military assaults on large scale civilian protests that began on 30 March 2018, ... including those that may amount to war crimes."
The special UN session comes after six weeks of mass protests and clashes along the Gaza border with Palestinian refugees demanding the right to return to their former homes inside what is now Israel.
Opening the special session earlier Friday, UN rights chief Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein slammed the "wholly disproportionate" use of force by Israeli troops and backed the call for an international probe.
"Nobody has been made safer by the horrific events of the past week," he said.
But Zeid insisted that many of those injured and killed on Monday "were completely unarmed, (and) were shot in the back, in the chest, in the head and limbs with live ammunition", he said, saying there was "little evidence of any (Israeli) attempt to minimize casualties".